Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta

Photography, Miki Matsushima

TokyoArt & Culture

Strange Brew

Catholicism mixes with shamanistic flavours in Stephan Doitschinoff's melting pot...

Stephan Doitschinoff has no shortage of powerful influences on his artistic style, influences that have in isolation shaped major movements on their own come crashing together in the Brazilian’s multimedia work. Son of an Evangelical minister, the artist also known by his street name Calma (Portuguese for “calm” and a contraction of the phrase “with soul” in the same language) was born and raised in the sprawling, chaotic, violent metropolis of São Paulo, and Doitschinoff’s work is a product of his upbringing and of his own explorations into spirituality.

Found growing in the north of Brazil, Jurema Preta is an entheogenic plant – one that is used in shamanistic rituals because of its psychoactive consciousness-altering effects – and also the name of Doitschinoff’s current exhibition at Tokyo’s Diesel Art Gallery, curated by his publishers Gestalten. He adds elements of European Catholicism, Afro-Brazilian folklore, paganism and semiotics into this strange brew, and the result is rich and dense with mysterious symbolism and mind-bending power. Featuring paper and canvas works, lithographs, woodcuts, short films and more, Jurema Preta runs until 23 May.

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Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta Stephan Doitschinoff — Jurema Preta